Environmental Management and Compliance News, Tips and Tools

April 30, 2010

EPA agrees: Saccharin is not so bad, after all…

In the April 22 Federal Register, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposed to remove saccharin and its salts from the lists of hazardous constituents and commercial chemical products which are hazardous wastes when discarded. EPA also proposed to remove saccharin and its salts from the list of hazardous substances regulated under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA).

The Calorie Control Council petitioned EPA to remove saccharin and its salts from the above lists. Evaluations conducted by public health agencies such as the National Toxicological Program and the International Agency for Research on Cancer have demonstrated that saccharin and its salts do not have either cancer-causing or other toxic effects that meet the criteria for listing as hazardous constituents, hazardous wastes, and hazardous substances.

When finalized, the proposed amendments will provide relief to manufacturers of soft drinks, flavoring syrups, pharmaceuticals and cosmetics from RCRA requirements to manage and dispose of unused or “off-spec” saccharin and its salts as hazardous wastes, as well as CERCLA reporting requirements for spills or releases.

I found this interesting because I have not heard much about saccharin in years, as other sugar substitutes like aspartame and sucralose (e.g., Splenda) have replaced it in common use. Do you remember when saccharin gained notoriety as a suspected human carcinogen?  Do any food products even contain saccharin as a “low-cal sweetener” anymore?

Filed under: Hazardous Waste,RCRA,Rules and Regulations,Toxic Chemicals — TCozzie @ 2:43 pm

February 15, 2010

Compliance Alert: Biennial hazardous waste reports due

March 1 is the deadline for large quantity generators of hazardous waste, as well as facilities that treated, stored or disposed of hazardous waste on-site, to submit their biennial hazardous waste reports to the US Environmental Protection Agency. (2009 hazardous waste report - hazardous waste satellite accumulation area)

If in any month in 2009 your facility generated more than 1,000 kilograms (2,200 pounds, or about four to five 55-gallon barrels) of RCRA hazardous waste, or more than 1 kg of acute hazardous waste, or more than 100 kg of spill cleanup material contaminated with acute hazardous waste, then you are a RCRA Large Quantity Generator (LQG) and must complete and file the 2009 Biennial Hazardous Waste Report.

For more information including forms and State contacts, visit www.epa.gov/epawaste/inforesources/data/biennialreport/index.htm.

For assistance with preparation of the biennial hazardous waste generator’s report, contact T. Cozzie Consulting.

Filed under: Compliance,Hazardous Waste,RCRA,Reporting — TCozzie @ 11:34 am